Member Spotlight: Gary Kern
U.S. Army veteran Gary Kern first experienced the pain of Raynaud’s when stationed in Germany during the country's second coldest Winter on record.
U.S. Army veteran Gary Kern first experienced the pain of Raynaud’s when stationed in Germany during the country's second coldest Winter on record.
At the supermarket, Carol Tonkin arms herself with a sweater, warm footwear and mittens, and that’s just in the summer. Carol has Raynaud’s.
Since she was a teenager, South African native Andrea Kemsley wondered why her hands and toes changed different colors in colder temperatures.
Lisa Cuffe thought her fingers turning purple when chilled was normal until a school nurse declared “You have Raynaud's disease."
If you're on this site, you've either been formally diagnosed with Raynaud's, or are familiar enough with the disorder to have determined you or a friend or loved one likely suffers from this widespread but little known medical condition. Most of us have been through the experience of Raynaud's discovery - that moment when we